The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, May 28, 1902, Page 7, Image 7
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f! ('/ takes the joy of life am
k ///imMllll stron? purgatives and drug
fife llllgjffl J If leave you in a worse conditic
, IlWK
I \\\\W^\v\ which help the natural for:
\\\\lffinAv\ feed the blood and paini
\\\\l^m Booklet and free s
\\\\WkY\ Complete treatme:
VwHnNilv BROWN
The Lexington Dispatch.
? |
Wednesday, May 28,1902.
[Continued from Page Six j
517 U M Slice, teaching 35 00
518 U M Slice, teaching.... 38 60
? 1 1--^ fi OH
OJLJ7 usjiuiu, movu g ^ ?
i 520 C B Jefcoat, teaching.. 35 00
p 521 W D Hill teaching 40 00
522 C S Bradford, insurance 7 50
523 Sue H Corley, teaching 12 85
524 O D Seay, teaching 21 40
525 Bessie Monts, teaching 25 20
526 P H E Derrick, teaching 16 60
I 527 S L Riwl, wood 6 50
i 528 Ellen Hendrix, teaching 16 04
p 529 E W Ward, teaching.. 30 00
530 W J Berry, teaching... ? 31 50
531 J W Wise, teaching... 25 00
532 J W Wise, teaching... 25 00
533 J W Wise, teaching... 25 00
534 J W Wise, teaching... 25 00
535 J W Wise, teaching... 12 50
536 C H Leaphart, teaching 15 00
537 Mary C Wingard, teach'g 30 00
538 Ella J Lybrand, teach'g 18 00
. * 539 Ella J Lybrand, teacher 18 00
540 Edith Swaffield, teacher 33 81
541 F P Shealy, repairs... 2 10
542 A P Sites, teacher.... 25 00
I 543 W H Roof, teacher.... 30 00
544 W H Roof, teacher 30 00
KdJi W "FT "Rnnf. teacher.... 30 00
546 W H Roof, teacher 27 90
547 W P Roof, material 15 00
548 W A Counts, teacher.. 38 65
549 W Caughman, teacher 28 38
550 R B Raw!, wood 1 75
551 Mamie Able, teacher.. 25 00
^ 552 Mamie Able, teacher.. 16 92
553 Bessie Mayer, teacher 20 00
554 Bessie Mayer, teacher 10 00
555 J M Epting, teacher... 72 00
556 L B Haynes, teacher.. 90 00
557 L B Haynes, teacher.. 90 00
558 Minnie Sbealy, teacher " 12 00
559 H Efcheredge, teaching 11 20
l 560 Erin J George, teacher 30 00
561 W L Motes, teacher... 25 25
562 W L Motes, teacher... 35 00
563 Pauline McCarley, teach 25 00
564 Mary Henry, teacher.. 27 00
^ 565 M C Riser, teacher 30 00
566 Beulah Fox, teacher... 30 00
567.PaulineMcCarley,teach 15 00
568 Birdie Brockmau, teach 43 35
569 O Haitiwanger,teacher. 45 00
c7n w n Tim 26 AI
if IV ?l XAKA) WWVMV& vv
571 S L Lorick, apparatus. 2 00
572 L S Mathias, furniture. 5 45
573 W J Berry, teacher 30 50
^ 574 Thad W Dreber, teacher 45 50
575 John D Farr, teacher.. 52 50
576 John D Farr, teacher.. 52 80
577 John DFarr, teacher.. 33 25
578 John D Farr, teacher.. 26 25
579 R E Livingston, teacher 40 00
580 R E Livingston, teacher 40 00
581 L B Haynes, teacher.. 90 00
582 A It Taylor, rent . 1 35
583 J M-Epfciog, teacher... 78 00
t 584 M C WiDgard, teacher. 42 60
585 W A Cbeesboro, teacher 20 00
586 P H E Derrick, teacher 25 00
^*?67 George Butler, teacher. 8 00
* ? ~ T"? I 1 1 1 /? Art
588 Ireorge uuuer, lescner. o uu
r 589 George Butler, teacher. 2 67
f 590 George Butler, teacher 1 74
591 George Butler, teacher 1 34
592 George Butler, teacher 12 35
593 George Butler, teacher 20 00
594 M C Riser, teacher.... 30 00 ,
595 W J Berry, teacher.... 15 00
596 D J Knotts, surveying 1 00
597 W B Fallaw, teacher.. 35 00
598 W B Eailaw, teacher.. 35 00
599 J M Epting, teacher... 45 15
600 M C Riser, teacher 34 92
601 J M Epting, teacher . 6 00
, 602 R E LivingstoD, teacher 40 00
603 J B Wiogard, teacher 18 10
604 W B Fallaw, teacher.. 35 00
]
Total SI 705114
;n and delicate women,
iy and makes the system y\\ y A
ssist Nature; do not take y\YwBm\\\\
s, which act for a lime, but )\\\^sSfi\\\V
>n than before. Use a gentle \y \ m|a \\
i mm pills !|||!
IIC. PELLETS jlljmijjl
:es to restore perfect health, j j MhxIIif
i the roses on the cheeks. Ill JfiBBs/j j/
The Price of Corn.
Country Gentleman.
Recent rainfalls in the corn belt
give promise of a bounteous crop,
says the Live Stock World. But will
corn be cheap in case such a crop is
harvested? Men of good judgment
do not hesitate to express the opinion
that corn will never again be cheap
as in the past. The opinion is based
on the growing demand both for
meat and cereal food. Present
prices of meat will doubtless stimulate
production and farmers merely
await assurance of a corn supply to
fill their feed lots. Old corn is a
novelty, and profiting by past experiences,
sagacious feeders will in
sure future investments in stock
cattle by laying in a supply of feed.
Even with a big crop farmers will be
reluctant to sell the major portion
unless the price is tempting. There
is also a growing demand for manufactured
cereal food. One factory at
Decatur, 111., now consumes all the
white corn grown within a radius of
thirty miles of that city, and these
plants are multiplying. All condiditions
justify the prediction
that 15 or 20 cents corn will
never be seen again and croakers who
protest that corn land is selling too
high forget that it is limited in quantity.
Wants Others to Znow.
"I have used DeWitt's Little
Risers for constipation and torpid
liver and they are all right. I am
glad to indorse them for I think
when we find a good thing we ought
to let others know it," writes Alfred
Helnze, Quincy, 111. They never
gripe or distress. Sure, safe pills.
J. E. Kaufmann.
Lived in Wife's Tomb.
For nine years an aged New Yorker
has lived in bis wife's tomb in ibe
Evergreen Cemetery. Devotion to
ber memory has robbed tbe once
powerful man of all bis physical
strength and vitality, sapped by
years of bitter exposure, is ebbing
away. He has always bad a melancholy
pleasure in sitting in tbe tomb
by the side of his dead wife, and
has found bis only happiness there,
for he does not believe be will meet
her in another world. Though he
lives in the tomb, tbe old man does
not sleep there. He leaves the cemetery
every night and goes to a little
room * in a house in Williamsburg.
Early in the morning he creeps out
of bed and goes to the cemetery.
"Good morning, Mary,""he always
says to his wife when he enters the
tomb, just as if her deaf ears could
hear his Voice through the thick walls
of the metal coffin.
You Know What You Are
Taking
When vou take Grove's Tasteless
Chill Tonic because the formula is
plainly printed on every bottle showing
that it is simply Iron and Quinine
in a tasteless form, No Cure, No Pay.
50c.
The discovery of an old Bible in
L e barn loft of Sarah Scarskading,
in xaurron county, Iowa, will be sufficient
to establish the rights of the
heirs to the Leonard Case millions.
Mr. Case died in Cleveland, 0., in
1861, and his millions have never
been distributed.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
How is your garden?
Cotton Mill on the Catawba, j
Charlotte, N. C , May 23.?J. B. j
Duke, president of the American To- 1
bacco Company, has placed orders in j
New England for machinery for a j
million dollar cotton mill. Mr. i
Duke's plant will be located at Great
F ill's, on the Catawba river, in Chester
countv, S. C. It will be known j
as Erwin Cffton Mill, No. 2, and W. \
A Erwin of Durham will be president.
j
The Duke3 now own in the south
enough valuable water power to run j
s million cotton spindles. J. B. Duke |
is quoted as saying that the only
way to effect a trust of southern
miils is to put up enough money to i
- ? " . T Ml _; _ _ 1 _.
Duy tnem an out. ?n mm circles i
there is a rumor that the Dukes are
seriously considering the question of
effecting a merger on their own ac- j
count.
Hilton's Life for the;
Liver and Kidneys tones
up the stomach. j
A tombstone marks the dividing
line between here and there.
Woman never allows her opinions ;
to spoil for want of being aired.
If a girl is foolish enough to tell j
when a man kisses her he may not do
it again.
Too many men attempt to pass
through the world on the reputation
of their ancestors.
Hilton's Life for the j
Liver and Kidnevs I
%j
overcomes constipa-j
tion. |
It is easy for anybody to get mar- |
ried, but it is hard for lots of them j
to stay married.
It isn't what a man is, but rather :
what he pretends to be that makes '
him ridiculous.
l
Usually when a man is a failure he j
has a patient little wife who makes
excuses for him.
It is easy to temporarily check a j
cough with the ordinary opiate cough
cure?, but when it is to be cured, the j
root of the trouble ousted, one must i
have Ramon's English Cough Syrup, j
the old reliable. Just think of it I j
a poseitive cure for 25 cents.
Judge a man's true worth by what j
he has in his heart rather than by |
what he has in his pocket.
The thread-like line between happiness
is the shadowy tracing of j
imagination.
n
We always have our doubts about
the liberality of the hostess who cuts
her pie into more than four pieces.
Hilton's Life for j
the Liver and Kid
neys will cure |
dyspepsia.
All the world's a stage upon which j
each actor plays his part?after j
which he occupies a private box.
HaDy a man's success in life is due i
to the fact that he is foolish in his j
talk but wise in his actions.
It's curious the way a woman
dresses in winter to catch cold and
in summer to get bitfen by mosquitoes.
Mrs. S. E. Hammack, Ky., writes:
"With pleasure I recommend Ra- !
men's Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets, i
1
I have used them myself for several j
years, and can testify as to their i
efficiency in sick headache and other j
troubles peculiar to our sex." The ;
entire treatment for only 25c.
Most women's ideas cf an "earnest
purpose" in life is to be able to J
make other women hate her for hsv- j
ing more than they have.
I
"Bliggins says he believes that j
8uccs98 depends on paying attention |
to the little things." "Yes," answered
Miss Cayenne, "I have noticed I
that he attracts a great deal of at- j
tection to his own opinions.''
Buckshoal. N. C. !
Four jear3 ago I was helpless
with a misery in my back. I could
not turn myself in bed. I was treat- !
ed by my physician, but he did me j
no gocd. I took one bottle of Dr. ;
Faker's Female Regulator and it
cured me. I think there is no medicine
on earth like it.
Mrs. Emma E. Myers.
For sale at the Bazaar.
Unless she is a healthy mother. Xo
woman can. If the baby has drained j
ilCi \ ILdlILN , Ai A CO V..UIV. AO Ui.\ , ii, lil
short, the baby is a burden instead of a
blessing, how can she enjoy it? She
loves it, but she cannot feed it. She
yearns for it, but has not the strength
to fondle it.
There is nothing more beautiful in the
world than a healthy mother and her
healthy child. The madonna is the
highest reach of human art. In the
serene strength which art gives to the
typical mother and child there is distinct
denial of suffering and weakness as a
necessity of motherhood. But how few
women are there to whom motherhood
is naturally an abiding joy. In how
many cases a woman dates her loss of |
health from the birth of her child ! To
all such suffering women Di. Pierce's Favorite
Prescription comes as a veritable
god-send. It prepares the mother for
her hour of trial, tranquilizes he* nerves,
encourages her appetite, and bVings her
restful sleep. It makes the baby's advent
practically painless, and gives the
mother abundant strength to nurse and
nourish her child.
Every claim made for "Favorite Prescription
" is supported by the testimon
ials of wives and mothers, 'thousands in
number, and covering in their several
experiences the whole range of womanly
suffering. I11 a great number of cases
after the utter failure of all doctors and
medicines, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription,
tried as a last resort, has effected
a perfect and permanent cure.
Sick women are invited to consult Dr.
Pierce by letter free. All womanly confidences
h Id under the seal of strict
professional privacy. Address Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Thex*e is no alcohol in "Favorite Prescription"
and it is entirely free from j
opium, cocaine, and all other narcotics. I
Between Life and Death.
"I tliink Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription :
and 'Golden Medical Discovery' the best mediciues
in the world." writes Mrs. Amelia Dougherty,
of Kerrigan. Wayne Co.. Mo. "My baby
was born last summer". After baby came I became
ill, had the best physician that could be
got, and he diagnosed my case as uterine trouble
tending to dropsy. Medicine seemed to do me
no good; I lingered between life and death for
quite a while, every day growing weaker, until
I could not walk across the room. My friends |
were looking for my death every minute. A |
friend wrote and told'me about l)r." R. V. Pierce, i
and I at once wrote to him for medical advice. |
He replied immediately, giving me full instructions
as to what to dol I at once followed his
advice, and when I had taken his medicine
about a week I felt a good deal stronger. When
I had taken it about oue month I felt as strong
as I do to-day. I took four bottles of each kind
and two vials of 'Pleasant Pellets.' Many
tViotil-c fnr the medicine Tt has cured me oer
manently."
Gained 40 Poundsm
"I am very glad to let other poor sufferers
know what Dr. Pierce's medicines have done j
for me," writes Mrs. Edwin H. Gardner, of
Beechv/ood, Norfolk Co., Mass.. Box 70. "You j
know I wrote to you last summer. I read what i
your medicine Had done for other people, so I
thought I 'would try it, and I found that is was a i
blessing to me and my family. I began in June j
and took six bottles ot your medicine, and three j
vials of ' Pellets.' I took your medicine a year j
when I had a ten pound girl. I had the easiest I
time I ever had with any of my three children.
I have been very well since I "took your medi- |
cine. I took three bottles of ' Favorite Prescrip- 1
tiou,'three of ' Golden Medical Discovery,' and
three vials of'Pellets.' I had no appetite and
could not eat much without it distressing me
before I took your ' Favorite Prescription ' and I
only weighed 135 pounds. Now I weigh 175
pounds."
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets commend
themselves as a family laxative. They 1
are easy to take, effective in results, and ;
their use does not beget the pill habit.
Fish That Kill Each Other.
One of the queerest sharks is the j
thrasher, which has the upper lobe of !
j*.. mii.ili .l^vnlrmnrl nc tn onmil !
lid mil CU UiUV.il U\. I V.IV|/VV* MO WW
in length the body of the fish itself. ;
This tail is controlled by powerful I
muscles and is used as a weapon, i
Swordtish and thrasher sharks have I
been seen on many occasions to attack I
whales in concert and kill them, the
sharks lashing their victims with their
tails while the swordfish pierce them
from below. On the other hand, sharks
themselves are ofteu killed by porpoises,
which will surround a shark
and lash the enemy to death with their
flukes.
Making: Him Cheerful.
She was a woman who was methodical
in her discipline.
"Now, Willie," she said, "you have
disobeyed me, but I won't whip you
now because we're going to have company
for dinner, and 1 want you to
look bright and cheerful and pleasant,
but after they've gone I'm going to
give you the worst whipping you
ever had. Now. hurry up and get
dressed, for I want you to look uice
and happy."?Chicago Post.
-
A I?a<l Case.
"I see that the bees have to visit '
3.000.000 blossoms in order to gather a j
pound of honey."
"Foolish bees. One trip to my sweet- j
heart's lips wouUI be quite enough."? !
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
i
X >t Too Liberal.
Parishioner?The people are com- j
plaining that you are too liberal.
Unorthodox Pastor?Oh. that's a
mistake, my dear sir. a great mistake. !
I am just as stingy as the rest of you.
?Now \ ork Weekly.
Won it h doesn't always bring happl- j
ness, but it can generally furnish a j
preftvgood imitation.?Somerville Jour*
*? ' ... . . .... ...... i
@ ^VE are ready for the Spring and Summer
buyers. Our stock is complete with all the
If f LATEST THINGS OF THE SEASON ||
mb ga
gjS Our net spot c-asli system of buying ami selling,
Sfjg coupled with experienced buyers, places us in a posi- ^?S
jrfy? tion to offer prices that few can meet. flJrSWe
invite you to inspect our stock when in Colum'M
Si; bia. It won't cost vou anything and may save vou Sz
flHB KQ v y O ?/ w apart
JJfcJ some hard earned American Dollars. Jifcj
CP By a special deal we are enabled to offer CP
H 5000 ME2T and BOY'S SUITS gg
at extra special prices. S5
Our ?10.00 Suits for Men arc made of the BEST
MATERIAL and by the best workmen. For ?5.00
BCT we can give you a suit lit for anybody to wear.
?0 1,000 pieces line Flowered Organdy, special, at 50c. ww
?9 1,000 dozen King's Spool Cotton at 12c. per spool. ClS
5,000 pairs Men' Mixed Wool Trousers at 25c. a pair ft?
ij5 We will be prepared to offer one of the largest Mai
asra Hats for men, at 10c. each. We have contracted
JhJJ for 25 cases and will be 50 per cent, under the market flffj
4S0S on these famous hats.
Thousands of good things to show you. H5
Thanking the readers of the Dispatch for their lib- gr|5i
eral patronage in the ]>ast and soliciting a continuance S3
of the same, I am the purchaser's friend, ww
1638 ANI> 161G MAIN ST., fMfm
?5
02 COLUMBIA. S..C.03
Clanilaril
wlillBHiil U
Goods of all descriptions are the only kind kept
in stock in our new store, and those who wish to
purchcase the latest novelties in Fall and Winter
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS AND MILLINERY.
as cheap as the same class of goods can be purchased^elsewhere,
should inspect this stock before
purchasing. Honest values for your money is
our guarantee, so if your want to buy goods
that will prove to be just as represented, give
us a call and you'll not be disappointed.
WM PL ATT,
MAI IT STREET, NEARLY OPPOSITE POST OFFICE, COLUMBIA, S. C.
October, 9?3m.
South Carolina Marble Works,
17?7 MAIN ST., COLU3IBIA, S. C.
BMARBLE AND GRANITE
Dealers South. We use the best grade material in manufactnring
Monuments and Headstones and guarantee our work and
fiiaish to be the best. When you hear a man complain;v>nr
+v>ot Vio nar> hnrr an nine.li eheaner from some
N little fellow who is anxious to sell anything, you
?$vjf &|j|5ii3S3 can Put ^ down that he will get cheap stock,
cheap work, and ol couise a cheap job.
|*gEa\V h|v?v1vm We can compete with any fair dealer
PHBiTif*'-- W *u country, but we cannot
say we will sell as cheap as
work.
IRflN i WIRE MM, GRAVE LOT COUfi, ETC.,
for sale. Write to us cr see our
MB. r. B. EDWARDS, LEXIXGTOX, S. C.
and we will see that you are treated fair.
SOUTH CAROLINA MARBLE WORKS.
September 11. 44?tl